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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Arata_EndoArata Endo - Wikipedia

    Arata Endo (Japanese: 遠藤 新) (January 1, 1889 - June 29, 1951) was a Japanese architect. He was a disciple of Frank Lloyd Wright. One of his most important works was the Kōshien Hotel, the architectural style being heavily influenced by Wright's Imperial Hotel, Tokyo .

  2. wrightinjapan.org › eng_wij › e_appenticesWright in Japan

    In 1917, Arata Endo, a 27-year-old architect and Wright enthusiast, was hired as Wright's chief draftsman on the Imperial Hotel project. The men found they shared a kindred spirit. Just as Wright had an unorthodox Unitarian upbringing, Arata was Christian with a nonconformist bent.

  3. www.moma.org › artists › 49602Arata Endo | MoMA

    Frank LloydWright at 150:Unpackingthe Archive. Jun 12–Oct 1, 2017. MoMA. Licensing. Feedback. Japanese, 1889–1951 Caption: The Museum of Modern Art Renovation and Expansion Designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with Gensler. Photography by Iwan Baan, Courtesy of MoMA.

  4. · Arata Endo: the architect who carried on Frank Lloyd Wright's Legacy in Japan [Spoon & Tomago] · All Frank Lloyd Wright posts. [Curbed National] Thirty years before he designed the seminal...

  5. 2. Okt. 2014 · As an architect and disciple of Wright, Endo can be easily criticized for never fully emerging from the shadow of Wright’s hegemony. His most important architectural contribution is, arguably, the Koshien Hotel, which was heavily influenced by Wright’s Imperial Hotel.

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  6. 26. Apr. 2024 · Many readers know that the old Imperial Hotel, built in the Hibiya area of central Tokyo in 1923, was designed by the American architect Frank Lloyd Wright. It was unfortunately demolished in 1967, but several buildings designed by Wright’s disciple Arata Endo still exist throughout Japan.

  7. wrightinjapan.org › eng_wij › e_appenticesWright in Japan

    Arata Endo Arata moved easily between the astronomical and the economical design, completing dozens of buildings in the 1920s and 1930s, including his masterpiece, the Koshien Hotel (1930), and many buildings for the Minamisawa campus of Jiyu Gakuen, before moving to Manchuria to pursue opportunities there.